The BIGGEST and the SMALLEST DINOSAURS from EVERY GROUP!
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- Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
- Dinosaurs are awesome, and we know that they got really big, but what were the smallest dinosaurs? Join me on a tour of every major dinosaur group to discover the largest and the smallest dinosaurs to ever walk the planet. Happy Dinosaur December! A special thanks to the Ridge Wallet for making this video possible! Get up to 40% off with my link www.ridge.com/... from now until December 22nd!
#clintsreptiles #dinosaurdecember #dinosaur
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Clint is a professional biologist and educator, but above all, Clint LOVES reptiles and he loves to share that love with everyone he meets. Whether you're lover or a hater of reptiles, you can't help but get excited with Clint!
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You guys are so RAD!
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Wanted to add some recent research on the Sauropods! A group of researchers were looking at the immense pressures put on the toe and foot bones on Sauropods, and how they would certainly crumble under such pressure. After running the programs over again with a pad of fatty tissue, exactly like elephants use, it brought the pressure down to safe levels. Likely convergent evolution needed to support such large weight. Interesting stuff!
I think I’m gonna use that humerus joke 😅
Eons shorts
I think (but I might misremebering) somethil alike was presented on hadrsoaurs hind legs as well.
The only problem is that (foot)print evidence shows that they lacked any fleshy padding to back the front feet, making them concave
Also, their footprints are also horseshoe shaped so uh
Can they inject some of that in my knees? I destroyed them playing futbol 😢
I've heard the Stegosaurus / T-Rex time-frame analogy told many times, and it still blows my mind. It's like how ancient Egyptians were alive the same time as Woolly Mammoths were just about hanging on around the Wrangel Islands (sure, they'd never meet, but it's weird thinking that there were still mammoths around when Egypt was forming), and that Cleopatra is closer to us in time than she was to the creation of the Pyramids.
What never ceases to blow my mind is : the stone age from the start to its very end took about 2,6 Million years, but it only took about 50 000years from the end of the stone age until today.🤯
@@chastitymarks2185 Industrial revolution and its consequences be like
That's like saying something that obvious
Ancient Egypt has been around so long that they had archaeologists studying Ancient Egypt
Something even more mind blowing about the pyramid things, is that the first restoration work done on the pyramids…was done by Egyptians themselves.
Clint doing Paleontology content? Never would have expected this, BUT I LOVE IT!
It is quite exciting! :)
“He’s probably right. But he’s also 9.”
Adorable!
Just a few notes;
1: Lianingosaurus are known mostly from juvenile specimens, so the adult size is currently unknown. The specimen found with fish in its gut is also believed to have been 12 months old when it died!
2: Micropachycephalosaurus is considered a basal ceratopsian, since 2011.
3: The current weight estimate for Argentinosaurus is 83 tons (166,000 pounds), still massive though!
Fun Fact: Anchiornis is the earliest Theropod known to produce pellets! (Like an Owl)
Love your content, great to see some fantastic animal / Paleo lovers out there!
Keep up the great work, & hope you & your critter family stay safe!
Cool
Really enjoying the topic. It’s not so much what subject you choose to discuss …if it varies from your typical topics or not…It’s that YOU are presenting the information. You’re excellency at delivering information really draws us in and I can follow and digest it as you speak. You’re a fantastic teacher!
Thank you so much! That's one of the best compliments you could possibly give me.
@marshalmarrs3269 what a fun idea! I'd love to see this video if it was made.
Agreed! I enjoy learning about all animals but wouldn't typically watch "reptile" videos on a regular basis--yet Clint's enthusiasm and sheer joy keeps me coming back to this channel! I'm jealous of his students lol.
@@ClintsReptiles Do you know what the tallest mountain is?
I'm 41 years old and I still own my dinosaur book from when I was around 10. It's so fascinating how some things are still the same and how others have changed over the past years! Also, thank you for including the metric system! Being from Europe, I have a hard time with feet and pounds :)
wow this sounds like a lot of changes compared to modern knowledge about dinosaurs *especially spinosaurus which last time it changed in appearance was 2020 with the newest tail discovery* ....this is the most fun part after all getting to slowly know about these animals and appearance is a small part that we question about them there is so much more about behaviour and physical capabilities
The metric system makes more sense that's why you struggle with feet and pounds. The metric system makes sense America just had to be difficult and do it thier way 🙄
@@sarahbeaulieu999 I guess if I had grown up using feet and pounds and Farenheit and cups and spoons, it would seem sensible for me, too. After all, there is a reason (other than Americans just being stubborn ;) ) why its still in use. I believe the UK also has a few interesting units (like "stone"), and also Canada.
@@ReginaRegenbogn in Canada, we use a mix of both, feet is used in certain areas, and older people, and also in certain situations (like height, sometimes) and metric in others. It's very confusing to people that aren't from Canada, but very normal to us
@@sarahbeaulieu999 hey it's not my fault i was born here, i don't get it either but now i can't understand the metric system
You have a pet snapping turtle.
Named Bubba Chunk.
Instant subscription.
The smallest dinosaur ever should be the hummingbird
This is your best video ever. You've cracked the code on making videos about phylogeny interesting to watch. I hope you do another one of these about theropods in particular.
I know right! I personally have the attention span of a fish and his videos are some of the only ones I genuinely enjoy watching :)
Love your work Clint! And I love that this month you will be crossing into Paleo content! I know you have dabbled into it before but this is your first big leap into my genre and I want to say that as a long time subscriber of yours, I'm super excited to see what else you come out with this month!
You guys need to find a way to collaborate because that team up would probably be great.
Correction in defense of Jurassic park. When the good doctor told them that the T-rex's sight was based on movement, he was talking about that specific individual. They didn't have enough recovered DNA for a normal T-rex fetus to be viable, so they spliced it with DNA from a frog, and that's why it was sensitive to movement instead of having the vision it should have.
Grant mentions this idea when we first meet him at the fossil dig, before he meets Hammond. The whole vision-based-on-movement idea was inspired by Jack Horner's ideas that Tyrannosaurus rex was a scavenger. Part of his argument was that they had poor eyesight and relied on smell. In the early 2000s a researcher tested this idea and determined that Tyrannosaurus rex had excellent eyesight, to which Horner replied that it doesn't mean they weren't scavengers. While he didn't say himself that their vision was based on movement, Grant was based on Horner, and both of them have perpetuated some misconceptions about T. rex that continue, depsite their having been disproved. In the novel of Lost World, it's stated that the idea arose from fossil braincase CT scans that suggested that the visual cortex of the brain resembled that of frogs, but I don't believe that was the actual source of the idea; I've never seen reference to that other than in that novel. In that same moment someone asks what would cause a T. rex not to eat something, to which the answer was, if it wasn't hungry, a gallows-humour reference to the rex having eaten a goat and the lawyer before stopping in front of Grant and Lex. 😆
Except alan grant knew its vision was based on movement despite not encountering the t Rex before
Big thanks to Ridge for sending all these awesome wallets and the daily driver kit - and supporting the channel! Here’s the site if you want to check them out! > ridge.com/clint
hi clint
Pepe, good news, there IS a penny-sized dinosaur!
@Pepe Silvia How big is a penny? Anywhere close to a hummingbird?
@Pepe Silvia No technically about it
@@ClintsReptiles penny sized ?
I really like how a bee hummingbird and a T. Rex are really closely related. Evolution can do funny tricks.
Just like how we’re quite closely related to tarsiers and aye-ayes
I feel you kept the inner child and you stayed happy to like your science rather then become diluted by our sick world. I like listening to you. You are so good and just well articulated on your subjects. Don't ever stop doing it and keep going.
I mean bee hummingbirds never walked the earth. They can't walk.
8:45 a predatory aquatic ankilosaur? Learning something new every day.
Right!!!!!
A bit of googling and I see people say that its predatory was debunked, because the fossilized fish was present throughout the full length of the body, not just in the guts or smth
Can't check legitimacy of these claims cause I'm not a native speaker and not that invested in dinosaurs that I want to check and translate for myself all sources possible
The spiked tail on stegosaurs is called "thagomizer", and Thagomizer also makes some great dino-synth music...
Small correction on Liaoningosaurus, the 34cm specimen is most likely a juvenile. The spinosaurus skeletons used are also no longer accurate, as they are discovered with short legs and a paddle tail.
Other than that, great video, can’t wait to see more of dinosaur december.
That's what we thought until we found a second specimen the same size with a belly full of fish!
@@ClintsReptiles
As far as I am aware, this interpretation is still contested. Based on histology it was more recently suggested, that the holotype might have been less than a year old at death.
Oral presentation = Li, X.; Reisz, R. R. (May 10-13, 2019). The early Cretaceous ankylosaur Liaoningosaurus from Western Liaoning, China; Progress and problems. 7th Annual meeting Canadian Society of Vertebrate Palaeontology. pp. 31-32.
Presents 20+ new complete specimens of Liaoningosaurus, some of them over twice the size of the holotype.
Key findings = All L. specimens are small babies - even the largest (100% bigger than the holotype) are well under 1 year in age.
Liaoningosaurus is a very young basal ankylosaurid that cluster with Gobisaurus and Chuanqilong (which *might* represent an an older L., but *still* a juvenile at 4.5m). Purported characters that originally placed it outside Ankylosauridae are either due to ontogeny or incorrect coding in the original description. Notably Liaoningosaurus has a "club-handle" on the tail like Gobisaurus.
So L. isn't a weird dwarf nodosaur, but a baby of a relatively conventional basal ankylosaurid that probably grew to an adult size of well over 4.5m.
Didn't go into great detail about their supposed aquatic adaptations, but they clearly need to be scrutinised more closely.
Maybe you are saying the tail was shaped like a paddle, but it certainly was not used as one. Biomechanical analyses have shown that it wouldn't have been able to cope with the strains of paddling.
Everyday it seems there is more evidence that Spinosaurus was an animal of riversides and shallow water, more like a heron than the quasi-crocodile Ibrahim and his team hyped it up to be.
These days I take anything Ibrahim says with a grain of salt.
My kids are totally in shock and think I'm so cool now because of this video! 😂 I always tell them 'look at that Dinosaur' while pointing to random birds and for you to say 'birds are dinosaurs' backed it up. Much love from Arizona.
Sauropods are part of a larger group of saurischians known as Sauropodomorpha which in addition to sauropods also included Buriolestes, Saturnalia, Thecodontosaurus, Plateosaurus and Massospondylus among others.
But which are the smalest and biggest of non-sauropod sauropodomorhps? From tom of my head it should be Euskelosaurus and Eoraptor probably (or some other basal, theropod-alike from trias)
ya and deserve a mention in the clade for Dreadnoughtus for it's size
Dinosaur December is here and this lovely introduction to the major clades of dinosauria is a great start! My extremely nerdy paleontological heart is EXCITED!!!
I LOVED this video. Your phylogeny videos are rapidly becoming my favorites. I can't help but be reminded of my paleontology and ancient life classes I took back in college. It's wonderful to get the endorphin rush of learning new things about prehistoric animals.
4:16 is that a pterosaur in the midle of a group of dinosaurs? That sneaky fellow is thinking : maybe if I look really big they confuse me wirh a sauropod🤫
Yeah, Quetzalcoatl. Tis pic shows various huge animals from Hell Creer formation and this sneaky fella is only non dinosaur that fit the description. But it should be smaller since HC Quetz is of smaller species. Still taller than humans, just slightly.
If I ever have children Clint's reptiles will definitely be a channel that they will be watching
Closet-paleontologist here, this is the kind of content I have been needing! I really appreciate the clades, osteomorphology, timelines and identification. Keep up the Dino content coming, December is just around the corner!
Remember the tail section is called a 'thagomizer' after the late Thag Simmons.
Small criticism as someone who's getting into palaeontology (on a Geology degree atm); showing a pre-2014 skeleton of Spinosaurus throughout the theropod section, as newer finds have the theropod as having very short limbs, a paddle tail and a likely rectangular sail shape.
Overall though the video is definitely solid
I'm pretty sure we don't have a complete Spinosaurus sail, so who knows what it really looked like? It would be pretty cool if the sails varied in size and shape depending on the individual.
1:36 THANK YOU! God! So many people just say birds are “ancestors” or “relatives” of dinosaurs. It makes me so mad, I mean what’s with people trying to keep distancing birds from dinosaurs? Do people not like the idea of having living dinosaurs coming right into youre backyard?
24:50 error actually the smallest non avian dinosaur is craotovis. It was around comparable to a bee hummingbird
I appreciate the way it was said as well!!!
Dinosaur December!!! This is awesome. Really looking forward to the ones you mentioned in this video. Dinosaurs are what got me into keeping modern reptiles so I'm geeking out!
Clint seems to be the only guy on UA-cam that makes it clear to viewers that what he's explaing is based on what's been found so far and that though many are facts but are subject to change as science learns more..That's the mind of someone who is passionate about discovery and getting to the truth..Always great videos👍
Absolutely loved this video! As a palaeontologist myself I’m incredibly impressed with how informative and comprehensive this was! Great job
I have NEVER been more excited for December, now it’s Dinosaur December on this channel. A dream come true!! Thank you for all of your hard work to deliver so much quality content
I've been saying for years that if they ever devolve chickens back into dinosaurs I want a miniature sauropod. It looks like Magyarosaurus might be the perfect sauropod
6:19 the spikes on stegosaurs are called the thagomizer, a word that is almost as cool as toxicognat ang conglobate.
The etymology of the term thagomizer is about as fun as officially recognized scientific nomenclature gets.
R.i.p Thag
It's crazy to think that when T-Rex was around, all the Stegosaurus were fossils.
Its obvious that this man loves his job!!! I feel better just watching him get animated and excited as he breaks out the line \ flow charts!
You are a star Clint. I love your enthusiasm, and always learn a bit more about reptiles with every vid. I wish you a very merry xmas. Cheers from me in the UK.
I'm a big fan of Dinosauria (I'm aktually studying this on my university), so this is totally great for me that you're making this awesome dinosaur december! I love it!
As a really small child all my first drawings were dinosaurs. so by the time I was young enough to comprehend life my room was full of aquariums full of reptiles, as I imagined them to be tiny dinosaurs. my first and only true love in life.. a bunch of dead creatures I will never see, what a time to be alive!
Be glad you weren't
Probably become a T Rex snack in short order
I work at a science museum, and we spend a lot of time explaining much of this to our visitors. Thanks for the video, Clint!
As a big dino nerd I always love learning about new ones, and there was more in your video than I expected. I really loved it
"You know, I'm something of a Dino nerd myself." 😁(Said in Wilam Defoe voice)
@Paleo Analysis 10/10 reply haha
Those hummingbirbs are hilariously small. Ive heard of them before. Theyre freaking adorable
I would totally recommend PBS eons for your son if you don't already know about it. It, moth light media, and Ben g Thomas have been such concise yet entertaining videos that here I am wanting to learn more about dinos... And I was never really a dino kid.
Dinosaur December kicking off with a bang...no pun intended 😂 I still find it crazy that the sweet, tiny hummingbird is the smaller counterpart to the huge, ferocious T-Rex!
im very into paleontology things so i knew most of the stuff in the video but it was still fun watching you explaining all those, in a more simple and understandable way that people who dont know many stuff about the topic can easily understand, very good video
This is what my life has been missing! I am so excited for this series.
The size of Eotriceratops has recieved an update in recent years. It had a proportionally larger head than Triceratops, but the latter was more massive.
I love this channel! It is made by a geek for geeks, which I am. 😅Dinosaur December!
This channel is awesome! Just found it! I mean a model of a skull for reference, anatomical facts, subtle humour, educational sidetracks, and using the metric system. It's perfect for me, a science nerd with a special interest in wildlife, ecology and reptiles. Thanks for the video I thoroughly enjoyed it and look forward to the rest of your channel.
*I. LOVE. DINOSAURS.*
More than anything that has ever walked, swam, or flown, or swam on this planet, and I’m so glad that these wonderful creatures are getting to be more popular again after a few years of obsolescence, I can’t wait for more of Dinosaur December
I had no idea the smallest Ankylosaur was semi-aquatic and omnivorous. Makes you wonder if there's some parallel evolution there similar to the hippo.
I think it is important to note that
1. Most if not all specimens are juveniles
2. The “aquatic adaptions” may be the fact that they are juveniles, and as they grow they lose these traits.
3. It’s unclear whether the fish are stacked under the ankylosaur, or the ankylosaur actually ate the fish
It’s still possible they have semi aquatic adaptions, but it has been challenged.
No, there isn't.
I'm to this day pleasantly amused at the origin of what Stegosauria tail spikes are called.
Years back there was a newspaper Far Side comic strip by artist Gary Larson depicting a classroom full of cavemen looking to a light projector. On it was the tail of a Stegosaurus with the caption, "Now this end is called the Thagomizer... after the late Thag Simmons". This of course was not the case, they had always been just called tail spikes, but by sheer chance this comic caught on and was adapted into officially recognized vocabulary to describe tail spikes of this manner.
Can you make a video about the most ancient dinosaur looking bird I've ever run across, the shoebill stork? I think it has become my favorite dinosaur.
Liaoningosaurus was probably a very young juvenile. A larger juvenile that may be the same species was over 14 feet long. Stegouros, a small parankylosaur from Chile, was probably the smallest as an adult as far as I can tell.
We need a video on the dinosaurs Clint would keep as pets.
Personally I'd want a sinosauropteryx because who wouldn't want a little fluffy dinosaur as a pet.
I remember reading about 15-17 years ago from some book that Giganotosaurus was likely bigger than T-Rex, and that Giganotos hunted in packs. Imagine how terrifying that is
And they were named after a woman, like the biggest storms... Giganotosaurus Carolini, after the daughter of the guy who discovered them... ❤
I love when Clint goes into Proud Dad Mode ❤
You are so intelligent and well spoken there is no way I could get bored listening to you. Honestly though can't decided if it's how interesting your videos are out the child like joy in your eyes when you are talking about things you are interested in but I tune in every week
Man. 1. Love your channel and 2. You just got me very excited for this month!
dinosaur December is the finest birthday gift I could have asked for! Thank you kindly Clint and stay rad :D
I hope you had a great birthday
Unless you did and I missed it, I think including a picture of the more modernized Spinosaurus reconstruction would have further illustrated your point, that is was both highly aquatic and proportionally longer for its supposed weight.
This is was my first video of this channel and I loved it, dinosaur fan since childhood so can't wait for more paleo/dinosaur content
Please make a video 5 More Best Pet Monitors. Those 'living mosasaurs' are Stinkin' Rad and would love to learn more.
Thank you.
Giant murder turtles made my day, thank you very much for that quote!
A very good video, but a few corrections. While eotriceratops was thought to be the biggest of the ceratopsians, based on the post-crania it seems to of been a bit of a bobble head, with a proportionately massive head. This likely puts it around 6 tons, still big but not quite king. Either torosaurus or triceratops holds that title, at around 8-9 tons each (although ‘triceratops’ albertiensis may beat them both). Meanwhile lianingosaurus is very likely a juvenile, so probs not the smallest ankylosaur. Stegorous is a good contender tho, at only a little bit over a metre long, plus it was weird in its own right, with a tail similar to an Aztec axe and seeming to lack any form of skull osteoderms
Also micropachycephalosaurus membership to pachys is quite questionable and there is huge posibility it´s ceratopsian. Still cute.
I really want a series of videos with dinosaurus that would make awesome pets. Just for the fun of it. Like, really, that would be fun!
Another great video, Clint! I love that we got a whole month of this kind of content ahead of us!
However my main reason why i am writing this comment is your pronounciation of the name "magyarosaurus". "Magyar" is hungarian word meaning "hungarian" and it doesn't read as ma-gi-ya-ro-saurus, but as a ma-ďa-ro-saurus with the ď sound being similar to the soft D sound in "duty". Just a little something in case that you come across the word in the future. If a word is of hungarian origin (like a name of a finding from somewhere central to south europ-ish area) and there is a "gy" in there, it most likely reads as "ď "
Anyway, i can't wait for that promissed tyranosauria video! Until then - bye🙋
I know it's extremely obscure, but have you ever considered doing a video on basal archosaurs like pseudosuchians and dinosauromorphs? I can't get enough of these.
Love this guy.
You can see the passion in his facial expression. He clearly loves sharing scientific discoveries and I'm all here for it.
So a duck is a dinosaur, but neither a duck-billed dinosaur, bird feet dinosaur or even a bird hipped dinosaur
Yes.
Aint science fun?
The confusing beauty of ✨science✨
"Sorry, Dr Grant. You know I love you." 😂
As someone who grew up on "birds evolved from dinosaurs", I still find myself amazed by the fact that birds are aparently basically a family of dinosaurs. And also that archaelogists from the past classified dinosaurs into "bird hip dinosaurs" and "lizard hip dinosaurs", but birds acutally belong into the latter group.
Yay, dinosaur December! Because we are into that kind of thing! Amongst many others, ofcourse.
It’s kind of crazy to me how little we actually know about most dinosaurs. I’m sure if I said “spinosaurous” in a room full of people, they would probably know what I’m talking about. We can have a perfect picture in our mind of what a spino looks like. In reality, they have an incredibly incomplete record of the animal’s anatomy based off of its fossils because there have only been seven individual fossils ever found. I think dinosaurs are awesome. At the same time, I think pop culture has had a slightly harmful effect on our perception of them. Even with the best documentaries out there like Prehistoric Planet, a huge amount of that information is simply based on assumptions. There is no good idea of the intelligence of these animals, so it’s impossible to correctly gauge their behaviors. I love dinosaurs and I want to know as much about them as possible, but I do believe that there are too many assumptions that get thrown around about their behaviors, diets, and lifestyles. It’s science, so one fact is only valid until something comes along and proves it incorrect. That’s why I am skeptical about most of these documentaries available
I agree with you on the dinosaurs fossils that are vastly incomplete, e.g. very few fossils, and paleontologists/scientists telling us how they lived based on this limited data.
whoever named chungkingosaurs, that's just beautiful
I think you missed the opportunity to call it "Dinocember."
Dinos are so cool! I used to be terrified of them growing up because of Jurassic Park but now they're just fascinating! I'm absolutely loving these dino december vids!
Hi Clint, I have been watching wickens wicked reptiles, and he is very enthousiastic about chinese cave gecko's. What is your opinion on these and could you maybe do an episode on them?
I think he did? I could be wrong
Clint - your enthusiasm is so infectious - you are such a family favorite in my house! You have educated us in SO many ways! I went from being anxious around reptiles, to owning and absolutey LOVING them. Thank you for your amazing energy and content ☺️!
What a way to kick off Dinosaur December!
Penny sized dinosaurs sounds like something that would appear in a strange dream
Cuba's just a strange dream.
@@B121AN1 lol
Great video and happy dinosaur December y'all
Clint, I don’t know if you’re familiar with Forrest Valkai but his teaching style regarding Evolution By Natural Selection, is just amazing. This man LOVES teaching Evolution and it makes learning about it super fun. You have the same gift!! You make it fun to learn about science and the scientific method. I wish every school had science teachers like the both of you.
18:49 Barosaurus: "And I took that personally"
DI-NO-SAURS! DI-NO-SAURS! DI-NO-SAURS! (continues chanting)
the smallest stegosaurus was called chunk-king, and i imagined some scientist was having fun giving it an ironic name
“And so is this”
The xiphactinus in the background: Achievement unlocked - Dinosaur
Fun fact, a recent study of T. rex's skull case and the endocast of their brain show that T. rex may had a very poor tracking vision. Meaning that he would have more ease to spot immobile preys, rather than mobile preys.... If you see a T. rex, move :p
Well, actually if you see a T. rex, the biggest danger would be his feet, because he will probably not try to eat a puny animal like an human, but he might crush you if you're on his path XD
0:16
Everyone: looking at t-rex
Me:looking at xyphactynus
So many of us who love to work with exotic animals these days, started off with a love for dinosaurs! It's so much fun to continue to look back on where it all started.
Clint, thank you. And thanks to your team as well. I only recently discovered your channel but I am already a big fan. And I love these videos about animal clades. Do you happen to know any channels regarding amazing plants? I already follow quite a few about all sort of animals and microbes and even some about fungi (though not here on UA-cam), but i haven't found any good entertaining and informative channel about plants
11:55 nicee. this dude is def my spirit animal
THANK YOU for pronouncing Saurischian and Ornithischian in the correct way in an English sentence.
Clint? Talking about dinosaurs?? I’m not sure if this is common because I’m new to the channel, but I’ve never been happier
You're going to love Dinosaur December! Welcome to the channel!
My 9-year-old inside was screaming BEST VIDEO EVER! Man, I enjoyed this. Thank you very much. Keep up the great work
I really appreciate your enthusiasm for educating, Clint. The way you teach makes learning so much fun.
two sauropods:
"Hey you want to go over and eat leaves off the tops of those trees, that's basically all we do"
"Nah actually, those trees will in millions of years and to a different species from us, be considered part of a different country called Chile and we have to stay in our future human country called Argentina"
"why"
"uh because"
"that works!"
I had actually heard of Marginosophalia, but dinosaurs are the special interest of a few of my students, so they keep me learning new things!